FACTS which contradict what is taught in the universities and which even run counter to the assumptions made by critics of misandry.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Suzi Olah, Prolific Serial Killer of Men for Profit - 1929

From: Ripley’s Believe It Or Not

A MASS MURDERESS.

FULL TEXT (Article 1 of 2): Susie Olah, a
midwife of Szolnok, Hungary, was proved to have run a veritable poison factory
to which no less than 105 murders have been traced. The bodies of 100 men were
exhumed by the Hungarian authorities and found to contain enough arsenious
oxide to kill a regiment. Forty-six women were charged with having administered
the poison, with a view of expediting inheritances or promoting illicit love
affairs. There are few pages of criminology more appalling than that which was
unfolded during the trial of the 46 prisoners in the district court of Szolnok
1929-30. The defendants who had acted strangely unperturbed during the trial
received the death sentences with stony silence. The chief culprit, Susie Olah,
escaped earthly retribution by committing suicide.

Suzi’s
sister, Lydia had this to say about the mass murder of husbands she
participated in:

“We
are not assassins! We did not stab our husbands. We did not hang them or drown
them either! They died from poison and this was a pleasant death for them!”

[Nash,
Robert Jay, Look for the Woman: A
Narrative Encyclopedia of Female Poisoners, Kidnappers, Thieves, Extortionists,
Terrorists, Swindlers and Spies from Elizabethan Times tom the Present,
Evans, 1981, p. 159]

***

FULL
TEXT (Article 2 of 2): The tiny Hungarian villages of Nagyrev and Tiszakurt are
unlikely locales for murder, but from 1909 to 1930, a series of murders took
place that made headlines throughout Hungary and all of Europe.

The
villages are isolated agricultural communities. In the winter, they are
snowbound. The closest railroad is 40 kilometres away.

The
male inhabitants work hard and play hard. They are forever sloshed on the
rather vile wine they produce, mainly for their own consumption. For relaxation
and to give a boost to their faltering egos, they often abuse their wives. That
is, until Susi Olah arrived on the scene in 1909.

Susi
was stout, short and not that good looking. In fact, she was a carbon copy of
most of the other ladies who were forever cleaning, cooking and having babies.
Susi followed the great demand. Her popularity wasn't due entirely to her
dexterity around those with expanding tummies.

You
see, the farms in the area were small, the soil poor. In most cases, a peasant
couldn't expand his farm because rich men's large estates and imposing walls
shut off any expansion. The laws were stacked against the peasants as well.
Upon the death of the head of the family, offspring would inherit only a
fraction of the father's land. Clearly, the more children, the grimmer the future.
Pregnancy was not always a happy occasion in Nagyrev and Tiszakurt.

Susi
gained in popularity when she added abortion to her repertoire. One has to keep
in

mind
doctors were not available in the villages. On occasion, when Susi lost a
patient, the only official, a sort of modern medicine man, examined the body.
This gentleman always attributed the cause of death to pneumonia, consumption,
heart failure and other common maladies. Of course, this couldn't go on
forever. Susi was concerned about the number of women dying while she performed
abortions.

That's
when she got her great idea. Arsenic. Wonderful, deadly arsenic was the
solution to all her problems. Why not let the women give birth and poison the
infants? The results would be exactly the same as an abortion without any risk
to the mother.

No
sooner said than done. Susi soaked arsenic laced flypaper in water. The
subsequent solution, placed in the unwanted baby's milk proved to be deadly.
Business boomed. Susi's reputation as a purveyor of death spread throughout the
two villages. For the equivalent of a few dollars, you could purchase a bottle
of the solution and, quick as a gypsy's fiddle, the unwanted child was gone.

Now,
Susi wasn't the only midwife in the area. Her competitors became jealous of her
success. Not to worry. Susi held a meeting with the four other midwives. She
explained they shouldn't compete against each other. To solve their problem,
they should divide the territory. Everyone agreed it was a super idea. They
arranged to meet again at Susi's home.

A few
weeks later, the midwives met for the second time. Susi served tea. Shortly
after the meeting, one of the ladies took ill and died. Funny thing, after
every meeting one of the women took mysteriously ill and went to her great reward.
So much for competition. Susi's fame and power grew. She had a husband and son
of her own. Up to this point, they add little to the strange tale of the
arsenic-slinging midwife. Unfortunately, Susi grew tired of her husband. He
died suddenly, supposedly of pneumonia. Susi's son smelled a rat. Armed with a
revolver, he faced his mother on the village's main street. He aimed and fired.
Susi stood unharmed as her son fell to the ground in agony.

The
villagers were impressed. What they didn't know was that Susi, anticipating the
problem, had laced her son's dinner with arsenic. Suffering stomach pains, his
aim was off and, quite by chance, he was overcome by excruciating pain the
instant he fired. Susi's son recovered, but so fearful was he of his mother that
he fled the territory, never to return.

The
long-suffering women of the two villages had a bona fide heroine. Susi became
their confidante and leader. The dominance of men over women in the villages
gradually disappeared. Under Susi's guidance, an unwanted husband was easily
dispatched via her ever faithful arsenic. The stout women of the village, once
stuck with unloving husbands, took on lovers. If hubby objected, a little
meeting with Susi usually straightened him out — permanently. She didn't charge
much for her service, normally the equivalent of $25. For those ladies in
better financial circumstances, the price rose to about $200. Kindhearted Susi
often dispensed her deadly concoction at no charge to those who couldn't pay.

For
years Susi serviced the women of the area. Men died, women took on new husbands
and lovers. A sort of secret sisterhood existed, with Susi acting as high
priestess. She expanded her operations, dispensing her "medicine" to
women who wanted to rid themselves of the elderly.

Of
course there were rumours, insinuations and downright suspicions, but they were
all put on hold with the outbreak of the First World War. The men of the
villages went away to war. Some were killed. The survivors returned to the
villages. Shortly after their return, seriously wounded former soldiers took
ill and died.

The first news of the drama taking place in the villages
reached the outside world when a Mrs. Bulenovenski reported that her 77-
year-old mother, Mrs. Purris, was missing. A few weeks later, the elderly
woman's body was found beside a river bank.

Clearly
discernible wheelbarrow tracks were found leading to and from the body. When
the wheelbarrow was located, it was traced to Mrs. Bulenovenski.

Well,
the goulash hit the fan. Bulenovenski was tried, found guilty, and sentenced to
life

imprisonment.
The cat was out of the bag. Now the men of the village knew evil forces were at
work.

In
July 1929, a new pastor came to the village of Tiszakurt. No sooner was the man
of the cloth ensconced in his new pulpit than he heard rumours about Mrs.
Ladislas Szabo, who had recently buried her aged father and uncle. The pastor
decided to pay her a visit. He explained his suspicions to the dear woman, who
broke into tears. Between sobs, she served the reverend tea. That night, he was
seized with convulsions. A vacationing doctor saved his life. He never bothered
Mrs. Szabo after that.

Someone
who has never been identified informed police in Szolnok, the closest city,
that Mrs. Szabo had certainly murdered her father and her uncle. The police
popped up in Tiszakurt one fine day and questioned her in the street. The
terrified woman confessed, implicating several other women, including Susi
Olah. The suspects were questioned. Five women broke down and confessed. They
were all taken into custody.

Susi
refused to talk and was released. She made her way to her home village and
visited several of her women friends. She told them to keep their mouths shut.
Unknown to Susi, the police had let her go, hoping she would lead them to the
other conspirators. The scheme worked. All the women were taken into custody.
All except Susi. When the police called at her home, there was no answer. They
found the mass murderer in a closet. She had hanged herself. Thirty-one women were
placed on trial in Szolnok for the arsenic poisonings.

The
trials took place that summer and spring of 1930. The pressure was too much for
five of the accused. They took their own lives. Others were found guilty and
jailed from five to 20 years.

Today,
in the two villages, it is difficult to find a home that wasn't affected by the
diabolical wave of killings instigated by Susi Olah.

[Max Haines, “If You Knew Suzi… - Arsenic Gave the Lady the
Power of Life and Death in Two Simple Hungarian Villages,” Lethbridge Herald
(Mi.), Jul. 8, 2008, p. A-4]

***

A feminist writer was, apparently, so admiring of Suzi
Olah, the Hungarian serial killer scores of males, that she seems to have adopted the name as
her pseudonym Suzie Olah for her
1970 article. “The Economic Function of the Oppression of Women,”
published in the magazine “Notes
From the Second Year: Women's Liberation: Major Writings of the Radical
Feminists.”

[Published
by: Sulamith Firestone and Anne Koedt, 124 pages, 1970]

The 124 page magazine included the following articles, some
of which are now considered “classics” of misandric feminism:

The Bitch Manifesto by Joreen
Woman and Her Mind by Meredith Tax
Love by Shulamith Firestone
The Politics of Housework by Pat Mainardi
A Female Junkie Speaks by Lucille Iverson
Radical Feminism by Ti Grace Atkinson
The Myth of the Vaginal Orgasm by Anne Koedt
The Institution of Sexual Intercourse by Ti Grace Atkinson
Female Liberation as the Basis bu Roxanne Dunbar
Women and the Left by Ellen Willis
Sequel by Ellen Willis
Hard Knocks by Carol Hanisch
Them and Me by AnonymousThe Economic Function of the Oppression of Women by Suzie Olah
Consumerism by Ellen Willis
The Pesonal is Political by Carol Hanisch
A Program for Feminist Consciousness Raising by Kathie Sarachild
Resistances to Consciousness by Irene Peslikis
False Consciousness by Jennifer Gardner
Man Hating by Pamela Kearon
A Critique of the Miss America Protest by Carol Hanisch
On Abortion and Abortion Law by Lucinda Cisler
An Abortion Testimonial by Barbara Susan
A Report from Law School by Marion Davidson
What Women Want for Starters by Congress to Unite Women
The New Feminists Analysis by Bonnie Kreps
The Founding of New Feminist Theatre by Anselma dell' Olio
On Class Structure Within the Women's Movement by Barbara Mehrhof
Power as a Function of the Group by Pamela Kearon
Sexual Politics by Kate Millet
Redstockings Manifesto
The Feminists a Political Organization to Annihilate Sex Roles
Organizing Principles of the New York Radical Feminists
Politics of the Ego A Manifesto for New York radical Feminists